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Post #33 If I could have any job in the world, what would it be?

01 Feb

I would love to win the lottery and attend Law School to become an Attorney.

Law School 2011

Lawyers counsel their clients on matters pertaining to the law. Law can be intellectually fascinating, and many take great satisfaction in the daily challenges. Detail mavens and big-picture thinkers alike find a friendly home in the loose definition of attorney. But not all were as gushing as this respondent: “You are paid to provide expert counsel to someone in a specific area of expertise, where usually the answers aren’t black and white. This pushes you and makes you think harder than you ever have before. It’s the last job you’ll ever want.” The last is an overstatement; over 30 percent of those who receive law degrees are not practicing law (regularly) ten years after graduation. It is impossible to mention attorneys without mentioning the public perception of attorneys. One attorney reminds us of the joke: “What’s the difference between a run-over snake and a run-over attorney? There are skid marks in front of the snake.” Attorneys are blamed for a variety of social ills, from the litigious nature of our society, to hindering new inventions from reaching the marketplace, to getting guilty people set free due to technicalities or sloppy police work. While these labels speak to the excesses within the profession, many people apply them to the profession as a whole. “It’s hard to work fourteen-hour days researching a case when you know that even your client thinks you’re a bloodsucker,” wrote a New York attorney. The work is hard. Attorneys can work eighteen-hour days and spend up to 3,000 hours per year on cases. “On some level you have to like what you do, because you’re doing it all day long,” mentioned one attorney. Many lawyers are subordinate to senior associates and partners for the majority of their careers. Attorneys usually work at a number of firms before finding a position perfectly suited to them. Many spend their first few years finding out if they want to focus on transactional work (corporate law or real estate law) or litigation (criminal or civil cases). Some specialized lawyers have restricted areas of responsibility. For example, district attorneys prosecute accused criminals and probate lawyers plan and settle estates. The quality of life is low during the early-to-mid-years, but many find the financial rewards too enticing to abandon. Those considering entering this field should have solid work habits, a curious mind, and the ability to work with, and for, others.

Women in law

Paying Your Dues

Attorneys must have a law degree from an institution accredited by the American Bar Association. Many find that undergraduate majors with heavy reading and writing loads, such as history, English, philosophy, and logic, prepare them well for law school. In addition, students must take the Law School Admissions Test. Application to the 175 accredited U.S. law schools is competitive. In law school, students first take general courses, which include such classes as torts, contracts, constitutional law, property, and trusts and estates. They then move on to specialized study in an area of expertise. Law students spend their summers working for potential employers, finding out what the working attorney’s life is like and discovering whether or not they want to work in a particular area. Before an attorney can practice in a given state, he must pass a state bar exam, a two-day written examination that tests the prospective attorney’s knowledge of the specific laws of that state. Following passage of the written part of the test, many states require “character and fitness” oral examinations to test the ability of a person to practice law in a given state.

Your money or your life

Associated Careers

Many people become attorneys with the understanding that the career is an excellent springboard to other professions. Lawyers enter business, accounting, finance, entrepreneurship, and academia after being in the profession a number of years. Some become judges. Many enter politics, and a number have become presidents.

 

About Jackie Paulson (Author)

You love to help others solve problems You are Intuitive; YOU SEE THINGS OTHERS CANNOT SEE. You are great at picking up on peoples moods and predicting the future. You know what others are THINKING before they speak a word. Your Purpose in life is to SHOW LOVE TO OTHERS~Lead Others People turn to you for Direction and Hope and New Ideas YOUR PASSION is learning You bring inspiration into people’s lives. YOUR DESIRE: TO find yourself You are able to remove your EMOTIONS and see the Big Picture. You have a GIFT for reading people “human Lie Detector”
2 Comments

Posted by on February 1, 2011 in Post a day 2011

 

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2 Responses to Post #33 If I could have any job in the world, what would it be?

  1. eof737

    February 2, 2011 at 9:44 AM

    You have a lot of insight on the subject and, you know, it’s never too late to pursue a dream. Go for it!
    Eliz

     

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